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HEAT!!! The Australian Experience Professor Will Steffen Climate Councillor.

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Presentation on theme: "HEAT!!! The Australian Experience Professor Will Steffen Climate Councillor."— Presentation transcript:

1 HEAT!!! The Australian Experience Professor Will Steffen Climate Councillor

2 Outline of Talk 1.Extreme heat and heatwaves in Australia 2.Consequences for Australians 3.Future heat: risks and responses

3 Trend in annual average temperature Source: Bureau of Meteorology 2015

4 Averages and extremes Based on IPCC 2007 Adapted from IPCC 2007

5 Hot weather is increasing

6 Continental-scale heatwave Source: Bureau of Meteorology

7 Heatwaves Heatwaves are becoming more intense, lasting longer and occurring more often. More frequent and hotter days are projected for the future. CSIRO and BoM 2015

8 2013: Australia’s Hottest Year on Record Virtually Impossible without Climate Change Source: Knutson et al. 2014

9 Bushfires

10 10 High Fire Danger Weather Sources: Clark et al. 2013; Jones et al. 2013 MELBOURNE AREA

11 11 Bushfires and Climate Change Climate change makes bushfire conditions worse by increasing the frequency of very hot days. Between 1973 and 2010 the Forest Fire Danger Index increased significantly at 16 of 38 weather stations across Australia, mostly in the southeast. None of the stations showed a significant decrease. Projected increases in hot days across Australia, and in dry conditions in the southwest and southeast, will very likely lead to more days with extreme fire danger in those regions.

12 Source: Vic DHS 2009 Melbourne 2009 heatwave

13 Extreme heat and health Extreme heat causes more deaths than any other natural hazard in Australia. Recorded deaths from specific extreme heat events: 374 excess deaths, Melbourne, Jan-Feb 2009 23% increase in deaths, Brisbane, Feb 2004 110 excess deaths, Sydney, Jan 1994 Without adaptation, heatwaves projected to cause over 400 excess deaths per year by 2050 in Victoria along (a southern Australian state). Sources: DHS 2009; Tong et al. 2010; Gosling et al. 2007; Keating and Handmer 2013

14 Extreme heat and worker productivity Extreme heat in 2013/2014 drove an annual economic burden of nearly $8 billion via worker productivity losses Heat stress in northern Australia has reduced labour capacity by 10% in past few decades; further 10% drop projected by 2050 Loss of worker productivity globally due to heat stress projected to be as high as USD 1 trillion by 2030. Sources: Zander et al. 2015; Dunne et al. 2013; Kjellstrom and McMichael 2013

15 Heatwaves and infrastructure

16 Infrastructure damage from the 2009 Melbourne heatwave An estimated 500,000 residents were without electricity on evening of 30 Jan. Extensive damage to railways: 29 cases of rail tracks buckling Electrical faults in signaling Failure of air-conditioning in more than 50% of trains

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18 Extreme heat and natural ecosystems Marine heatwaves have caused repeated coral bleaching of the Great Barrier Reef since the late 1970s. Heatwaves combined with extended drought have caused mass mortality in koalas. Since 1994, more than 30,000 flying foxes have died in extreme heat. On 12 Jan 2012, over 3,500 were killed along the NSW coast when temperatures exceeded 42 o C. In Jan 2010 in Western Australia, over 200 of the endangered Carnoby’s black cockatoos were killed when temperatures rose to 48 o C. Sources: Saunders et al. 2011; Welbergen et al. 2008; Gordon et al. 1998

19 CSIRO and BoM 2015 More heat to come

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21 Stabilising the climate system Meinshausen et al. 2009

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23 @climatecouncil


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